Garwood Russell J, Dunlop Jason
School of Earth, Atmospheric and Environmental Sciences and The Manchester X-ray Imaging Facility, School of Materials, The University of Manchester , Manchester , UK.
Museum für Naturkunde, Leibniz Institute for Research on Evolution and Biodiversity at the Humboldt University Berlin , Berlin , Germany.
PeerJ. 2014 Nov 13;2:e641. doi: 10.7717/peerj.641. eCollection 2014.
Arachnids are an important group of arthropods. They are: diverse and abundant; a major constituent of many terrestrial ecosystems; and possess a deep and extensive fossil record. In recent years a number of exceptionally preserved arachnid fossils have been investigated using tomography and associated techniques, providing valuable insights into their morphology. Here we use X-ray microtomography to reconstruct members of two extinct arachnid orders. In the Haptopoda, we demonstrate the presence of 'clasp-knife' chelicerae, and our novel redescription of a member of the Phalangiotarbida highlights leg details, but fails to resolve chelicerae in the group due to their small size. As a result of these reconstructions, tomographic studies of three-dimensionally preserved fossils now exist for three of the four extinct orders, and for fossil representatives of several extant ones. Such studies constitute a valuable source of high fidelity data for constructing phylogenies. To illustrate this, here we present a cladistic analysis of the chelicerates to accompany these reconstructions. This is based on a previously published matrix, expanded to include fossil taxa and relevant characters, and allows us to: cladistically place the extinct arachnid orders; explicitly test some earlier hypotheses from the literature; and demonstrate that the addition of fossils to phylogenetic analyses can have broad implications. Phylogenies based on chelicerate morphology-in contrast to molecular studies-have achieved elements of consensus in recent years. Our work suggests that these results are not robust to the addition of novel characters or fossil taxa. Hypotheses surrounding chelicerate phylogeny remain in a state of flux.
蛛形纲动物是节肢动物中的一个重要类群。它们具有以下特点:种类多样且数量丰富;是许多陆地生态系统的主要组成部分;拥有丰富而广泛的化石记录。近年来,一些保存异常完好的蛛形纲动物化石已通过断层扫描及相关技术进行了研究,为了解它们的形态提供了宝贵的见解。在此,我们利用X射线显微断层扫描技术对两个已灭绝的蛛形纲目进行了重建。在哈普托足纲中,我们证实了“折刀状”螯肢的存在,并且我们对节腹目一个成员的全新描述突出了腿部细节,但由于该类群的螯肢尺寸较小,未能解析清楚。这些重建的结果是,现在已对四个已灭绝目中的三个以及几个现存目的化石代表进行了三维保存化石的断层扫描研究。此类研究构成了构建系统发育树的高保真数据的宝贵来源。为了说明这一点,在此我们展示了一个伴随这些重建的螯肢动物的分支系统分析。这是基于之前发表的一个矩阵,扩展后纳入了化石分类单元和相关特征,使我们能够:在分支系统学上确定已灭绝的蛛形纲目;明确检验文献中一些早期的假设;并证明在系统发育分析中加入化石可能会产生广泛的影响。与分子研究相比,基于螯肢动物形态的系统发育树近年来已达成了一些共识。我们的研究表明,这些结果对于加入新特征或化石分类单元并不稳健。围绕螯肢动物系统发育的假设仍处于不断变化的状态。